Ah,
bliss. The morning I was to leave Albuquerque, I headed to the the Owl
Cafe. I had to use my last opportunity to get huevos rancheros New
Mexico style - in other words, with lots of green chile. I wish I had
remembered to get a photo of the place on the way out - the architecture
is distinctive - but I did remember to buy a black Owl Cafe t-shirt.
There
was a nice nip in the air as I headed east on old Route 66. At the
town of Tijeras, I turned south along a comfortably bendy two-laner.
Ah, delight - riding through old towns, some of them land grants from
the days when Spain owned the area. Old churches in decaying villages
as I rode on nice curvy roads along the side
of the Manzano mountains.
Too
soon, I came back out onto the eastern plains of New Mexico. The
landscape flattened out and soon oil rigs appeared. Southeastern New
Mexico is atop part of the big Permian Basin oil fields, which are being
awakened from decades of decline by the advent of new technologies.
Before the trip, I had wondered why motel room rates were so high - and
now I knew its because the demand for rooms from the many new oilfield
workers. Simple supply and demand.
I
arrived in Artesia much too early to end the day, so I cancelled the
motel reservations and rode on. I disliked crossing into Texas - I
enjoyed the “ooo and ah” as people saw the license plate on my scooter
that placed me far from home. Once back in Texas, I was just another
bike.
I
had a bit of a hard time finding a room in San Angelo. It seems the
fracking oil boom has hit there too, and most rooms were taken by oil
field workers.
I
wanted to make it home the next day, so Saturday morning, I was up
before the dawn and on my way. About an hour down the road, I found a
bakery in Eldorado. Two things about Eldorado: first, the
bakery was
run by an Asian couple. When I asked the woman “You aren’t from around
here, are you?”, she replied with a thick accent that she had just moved
from Pennsylvania. I was to find out later that she and her husband
are Cambodian. The other prominent note about Eldorado is that it is
the home of the Yearning for Zion Ranch - the headquarters of the
fundamentalist and polygamist break away Mormon sect which was raided
for child abuse awhile back.
I
cut across the southern end of the Texas Hill Country, then into the
border city of Laredo. Mistake in doing that - way too much traffic.
But Laredo also meant I was getting close to home, and as rain clouds
threatened, I boogied alongside the Rio Grande until I saw the home
fires burning.
So - was it a great trip?
Hell
yes! I loved it - meeting the challenges of riding 3,600 miles on a
400 cc scooter. From the subfreezing morning in Portales to the Mojave
desert, from flat plains to mountain twisties, it was a lot of fun.
Wonder where I’ll go next.
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